From Wiktionary under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Tue Aug 17 08:48:14 2010

Evolution (also known as biological, genetic or organic evolution) is the change in the inherited traits of a population of organisms through successive generations. This change results from interactions between processes which introduce variation into a population, and other processes which remove it. As a result, variants with particular traits become more, or less, common. A trait is a particular characteristic, anatomical, biochemical or behavioural, that is the result of gene–environment interaction.

The main source of variation is mutation, which changes the base pair sequences of genes. These altered genes can be passed on through reproduction, and give rise to alternative varieties, or alleles, of traits in organisms. Another source of variation is genetic recombination which shuffles the genes into new combinations that can result in organisms exhibiting different traits. Under certain circumstances, variation can also be increased by the transfer of genes between species, and by the extremely rare, but significant, wholesale incorporation of genomes through endosymbiosis.

Two main processes cause variants to become more common or rare in a population. One is natural selection, through which traits that aid survival and reproduction become more common, while traits that hinder survival and reproduction become more rare. Natural selection occurs because only a small proportion of individuals in each generation will survive and reproduce, since resources are limited and organisms produce many more offspring than their environment can support. Over many generations, heritable variation in traits is filtered by natural selection and the beneficial changes are successively retained through differential survival and reproduction. This iterative process adjusts traits so they become better suited to an organism's environment: these adjustments are called adaptations.

However, not all change is adaptive. Another cause of evolution is genetic drift, which leads to random changes in how common traits are in a population. Genetic drift is most important when traits do not strongly influence survival, particularly so in small populations where chance plays a disproportionate role in the frequency of traits passed on to the next generation. Genetic drift is important in the neutral theory of molecular evolution, and plays a role in the molecular clocks that are used in phylogenetic studies.

A key process in evolution is speciation, in which a single ancestral species splits and diversifies into multiple new species, and there are several modes through which this occurs. Ultimately, all living (and extinct) species are descended from a common ancestor via a long series of speciation events. These events stretch back in a diverse "tree of life" that has grown over the 3.5 billion years in which life has existed on Earth. This is visible in anatomical, genetic and other similarities between groups of organisms, geographical distribution of related species, the fossil record and the recorded genetic changes in living organisms over many generations.

Evolutionary biologists document the fact that evolution occurs, and also develop and test theories that explain its causes. The study of evolutionary biology began in the mid-nineteenth century, when research into the fossil record and the diversity of living organisms convinced most scientists that species changed over time. The mechanism driving these changes remained unclear until the theory of natural selection was independently proposed by Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace. In 1859, Darwin's seminal work On the Origin of Species brought the new theory of evolution by natural selection to a wide audience, leading to the overwhelming acceptance of evolution among scientists. In the 1930s, Darwinian natural selection became understood in combination with Mendelian inheritance, forming the modern evolutionary synthesis, which connected the substrate of evolution (inherited genetics) and the mechanism of evolution (natural selection). This powerful explanatory and predictive theory has become the central organizing principle of modern biology, directing research and providing a unifying explanation for the history and diversity of life on Earth. Evolution is applied and studied in fields as diverse as agriculture, anthropology, conservation biology, ecology, medicine, paleontology, philosophy, and psychology along with other specific topics in the previous listed fields.

From Wikipedia under the GNU Free Documentation License
Fri Sep 3 21:01:36 2010

Why do some Christians think evolution is about the start of the universe?
Q. I've seen many answers and comments on other sites where Christians think evolution is about how the universe begins. Why do they not learn what evolution is before they make statements about it?
Asked by Cur mudgen - Tue Mar 2 08:26:34 2010 - - 21 Answers - 0 Comments

A. I do not know EXACTLY why Christians mainly in the USA believe that evolution has anything to do with their interpretation of Christianity. Evolution is a scientific theory and science is bendable. Christianity/Creationism has nothing to do with science. I am not saying that there isn't a god, I am just saying that it shouldn't judge the Theory of Evolution cause after all, it is a Theory and subject to change. A Theory is a set of statements or principles devised to explain a group of facts or phenomena, especially one that has been repeatedly tested or is widely accepted and can be used to make predictions about natural phenomena. The Big Bang theory is however, I would understand if the Religions were attacking this theory instead of… [cont.]
Answered by Ty - Tue Mar 2 20:50:19 2010

What are your best arguments against evolution?
Q. I'm planning on making a Youtube video on the subject of evolution some time in the next week or so. I'm going to cover the basic theory, evidence and tackle some of the biggest criticisms. So what are your arguments against evolution?
Asked by James W - Sat Jul 17 18:45:34 2010 - - 7 Answers - 0 Comments

A. As a world-renowned award-winning Creationist I can tell you most plainly that there aren't any scientific arguments against the Theory of Evolution. If there were, then it wouldn't be a scientific theory. If you're interested in entertaining arguments that do not come from the realm of logic, here are my favorites: 1. God did it, therefore macroevolution was not necessary. 2. God did it 6,014 years ago therefore there has not been enough time for macroevolution to have taken place to produce today's biodiversity. 3. President GW Bush said, "Well the jury's still out on evolution" therefore evolution can't be right, because the American people would not elect an ignoramus to be the leader of the Free World 4. The existence of Hayden… [cont.]
Answered by emucompboy - Sat Jul 17 19:17:11 2010

Dont you think that certain aspects of evolution and survival has drawn a dark cloud over the human race?
Q. I know evolution is a fact , but i also believe that certain concepts that are linked to evolution and survival , when taken seriously have become dangerous. While survival of the fittest and putting your self and your own family ahead of others has given humans a chance to evolve and come to this stage that we are now, dont you think that this selfish gene of my life been more important than someone else's life , if not reversed will only end in disaster for the entire human race? What do you think?
Asked by Irish Girl - Wed Jan 13 08:14:53 2010 - - 10 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Evolution is a fact, but that highly evolved brain is far more powerful than for mere survival and perpetuation of the species. It enables us to transcend our animal drives and discover in ourselves and others stunning capacity for love and putting the welfare of all humanity at the top and creating a world that cherishes the development of human capacity and care for the planet. That powerful brain enables us to create societies and institutions for bringing out and nurturing all the latent potentialities of every human on the planet. We are amazing, stunning beings. Our failure is one of conceptualization, the failure of realizing what the essence of being human is.
Answered by jaicee - Wed Jan 13 08:26:44 2010

From Yahoo Answer Search: "evolution"
Thu Sep 2 21:12:30 2010

Evolution is change in populations of organisms over generations. Offspring differ from their parents in various ways. When these differences are helpful, the offspring have a greater chance of surviving and reproducing, making the differences more common in the next generation. In this way, differences can accumulate over time, leading to major changes in a population.

The scientific theory of evolution—the explanation for how evolution occurs—states that all living things are descended, at some point in the distant past, from a single common ancestor. This is called common descent. Since the beginning of life, evolution has transformed the first species into more and more different species as life has found a variety of ways to survive and flourish. This has resulted in the many diverse forms of life that exist today.

Sourced

  • The antagonism between science and religion, about which we hear so much, appears to me to be purely factitious–fabricated, on the one hand, by short-sighted religious people who confound a certain branch of science, theology, with religion; and, on the other, by equally short-sighted scientific people who forget that science takes for its province only that which is susceptible of clear intellectual comprehension; and that, outside the boundaries of that province, they must be content with imagination, with hope, and with ignorance.
  • Anthropological, biological, and genetic evidence all put the origin of modern humans at between 200,000 and 100,000 years ago, probably in Africa. There is also much data that show an outburst of cultural behavior occurring around 50,000-40,000 years ago in Europe. That's when archaeologists date the oldest evidence of burial ceremonies, body ornaments, and cave paintings.
    • William J. Cromie, Facing up to Modern Man; Harvard Gazette
Evolution, Progress (1 Letter) - New York Times
nytimes.com
Evolution, Progress (1 Letter) - New York Times
Tue, 03 Aug 2010 00:24:52 GMT+00:00
, Progress (1 Letter) New York Times Scientific progress, like nature itself, follows punctuated evolution with fits and starts. Each discovery is a story with a lesson; here, success can be ...
Evolutionary
evolutionnews.org
Evolutionary "Gems" or "Narrative Gloss"? - Discovery Institute (blog)
Fri, 06 Aug 2010 15:26:42 GMT+00:00
Discovery Institute (blog) In the previous four responses to Nature's evolution -evangelism packet, we saw that at least 9 of their 15 "evolutionary gems" showed mere small-scale ...
Sponge Sequence - Santa Barbara Edhat
edhat.com
Sponge Sequence - Santa Barbara Edhat
Wed, 04 Aug 2010 17:34:21 GMT+00:00
Santa Barbara Edhat Co-author Todd Oakley, professor in UCSB's Department of Ecology, Evolution & Marine Biology, explained that this work also helps scientists to understand ...

From Google News Search: "evolution"
Fri Sep 3 21:01:38 2010

evolution jpg
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that humans and animals were two completely disparate entities Thus it would be a natural conclusion that we have many similarities to the line that we have evolved from primates In fact it has been discovered that we only differ by 1 5 in our genetic make up the blueprint of life We have evolved however to have less hair and are less mobile than say our

Evolution
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Evolution
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Modelos de varias marcas incluidas Mercedes Audi VW etc con una dinamica de conduccion bastante creible Esta mas cerca de ser un simulador que un arcade pero es divertido a raudales coches que sufren danos preciosos graficos con reflejos reales en las carrocerias blackouts cuando los

EVOLUTION
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EVOLUTION
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makes art It s a huge metaphysical leap to imagine that I refers to an inner essence self or soul in Stelarc The Monograph chapter 7 Animating bodies mobilizing technologies Evolution Writing 1 word simultaneously with 3 hands Maki Gallery Tokyo 1982 Photo Keisuke Oki The high suspensions especially the one in Copenhagen from a crane above the Royal Theatre

From Yahoo Image Search: "evolution"
Fri Sep 3 21:01:38 2010

Long Term Evolution : 3GPP LTE Radio and Cellular Technology ...
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Long Term Evolution : 3GPP LTE Radio and Cellular Technology ...

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Fri, 03 Sep 2010 19:18:09 GM

Long Term . Evolution. : 3Gpp lte radio and Cellular Technology (Internet and Communications)​ Long Term . Evolution. : 3GPP LTE Radio and Cellular Technology (Internet.

From Google Blog Search: "evolution"
Fri Sep 3 21:00:10 2010

Guinness ""
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Guinness ""

Tue, 04 Jul 2006 17:29:13 PDT

Cannes Grand Prix TVC winner. youtube.com.

CLOSING ARGUMENTS
pbs.org
CLOSING ARGUMENTS

Wed, 10 Sep 2008 17:28:32 PDT

After six weeks, the trial concludes with closing arguments that were as divided as Dover itself had become, and Judge Jones renders his ... pbs.org.

Creation Science Versus Theory #4: Evidences for a Young Earth
espanol.​video.​yahoo.​com
Creation Science Versus Theory #4: Evidences for a Young Earth

Fri, 17 Jul 2009 15:56:24 PDT

Larry Wessels, director of Christian Answers of Austin, Texas/ Christian Debater (search BibleQuery, HistoryCart, & MuslimHope), interviews Dr ... espanol.video.y​ahoo.com.

From Google Video Search: "evolution"
Fri Sep 3 21:01:38 2010